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The RtI PlanSpecial Education Directors’ ConferenceAugust 1, 2008Beth Hanselman and Marica CullenIllinois State Board of Education

Defining Response to Intervention (RtI)

RtI: Good “IDEA” Policy

Approach for redesigning and establishing teaching and learning environments that are effective, efficient, relevant and durable for allstudents, families and educators

NOT a program, curriculum, strategy, interventionNOT limited to special educationNOT new

What is Response to Intervention?

Response to Intervention (RtI) consists of Three Essential Components:

Providing high quality, research-based instruction/intervention matched to student needsUsing data regarding learning rate over time and level of performance Making educational decisions based upon student’s response to instruction/intervention

Why Use RtI?

RtI enables educators to target instructional interventions in response to children’s specific areas of need as soon as those needs become apparent

Before, the education system waited for a student to fail before attempting more intensive instructional interventions

Current research demonstrates that early intervention is crucial to a student’s success

Why Else Should We Use RtI?

RtI allows special and general educators to collaborate in order to educate all students

RtI creates an educational system that focuses on success for all learners

RtI identifies struggling learners early

RtI requires data-driven educational decision-making for all learners

Basic Elements of RtI –A Primer

Core Principles of RtI

Educators will:Intervene earlyUse a multi-tier model of instructionUse a problem-solving methodUse scientific, research-based interventions/instructionMonitor student progress to inform instructionUse data to make decisionsUse assessments for screening, diagnostics and progress monitoringEffectively teach all children

Common Elements in RtI

Multi-Tier Model –The Dual-Sided Pyramid

Problem-Solving Model – The Circle

Multi-Tier Model

Academic Systems Behavioral Systems

Tier 3Individual Students/Very Small GroupAssessment-basedHigh Intensity

Tier 3Individual Students/ Very Small GroupAssessment-basedIntense, durable procedures

Tier 2Some students (at-risk)High efficiencyRapid response

Tier 2Some students (at-risk) High efficiencyRapid response

Tier 1All studentsPreventive, proactive

Tier 1All settings, all studentsPreventive, proactive

What Does RtI Look Like?

Tier 1: Core curriculum meets the needs of 80%* or more of the students

Tier 2: 20%* of the students may be identified as at-risk and require supplemental instruction/intervention in addition to the core curriculum

Tier 3: 5%* of those students may be identified as needing more intensive, small group or individual interventions to supplement the core curriculum

*Percentages will vary by district/school

Tier 1 Core Instruction

All Students Receive:District curriculum that is scientifically, research-based and aligned to Illinois Learning Standards

Curriculum-based measures and assessments for screening, diagnostic and continuous progress monitoring

Differentiated instruction designed to meet the broad range of their needs

Tier 2 Intervention

Some Students Receive:Individualized Intervention Plan

Core curriculum in the large group

Supplemental interventions in the small group inside the general education classroom or outside of the general education classroom

Interventions targeted to remediate a specific skill

Interventions implemented with integrity (e.g., number of minutes/day and per week, materials used, progress monitoring and implementer) tied to an individualized intervention plan

Tier 3 Intervention

Very Few Students Receive:Individualized Intervention Plan

Integrated instruction from all three tiers to strengthen the accumulated impact of the interventions and instructionInterventions delivered to very small groups of 2-3 students or individual studentsInterventions focused on narrowly defined skill areas identified from the results of frequent progress monitoringInterventions implemented with integrity (e.g., number of minutes/day and per week, materials used, progress monitoring and implementer) tied to an individualized intervention plan

Problem-Solving Model

What is the problem?

Why is ithappening?

What should be done about it?

Did it work?

The Link Between RtI, Problem-Solving and SLD

RtI is the problem-solving method for identifying a student’s strengths and weaknesses both academically and behaviorally

RtI matches instructional resources to educational needs

RtI provides the historical data needed to determine what the school needs to do to ensure a student’s success in the general education curriculum

Building Level Intervention Team Problem-Solving Actions

Promote collaboration in the decision-making process

Analyze building and classroom level data

Collaboratively develop individual intervention plans for struggling learners

Assist teachers in selecting research-based interventions

Support teachers in implementing interventions with integrity

RtI – Legislation, Rules and State Plans

Illinois and Response to Intervention (RtI) – Background

IDEA Regulations effective October 13, 2006

Illinois Part 226.130 Rules adopted June 28, 2007

IDEA Regulations- October 13, 2006

The Statemust not require the use of a severe discrepancy between intellectual ability and achievement for determining whether a child has a specific learning disability

must permit the use of a process based on the child’s response to scientific, research-based intervention

IDEA Regulations- October 13, 2006

The Teammust document how the child responds to scientific, research-based interventionsmust document that the child does not achieve adequately or make sufficient progress in state-approved grade-level standardsmust consider data that demonstrates appropriate instruction delivered by qualified personnel and documentation of repeated assessments of achievement at reasonable intervals

Illinois Part 226.130 Rules

Require:use of a process that determines how the child responds to scientific, research-based interventions as part of the evaluation procedure described in 34 CFR 300.309development and distribution of a State RtI Plan by January 1, 2008 by the State Superintendent in collaboration with professional organizations outlining the professional development that is necessary and other activities and resources that are essential for implementation

Illinois Part 226.130 Rules

Require:Illinois districts to complete a plan for transition to the use of a process that determines how the child responds to scientific, research-based intervention as part of the evaluation procedure by January 1, 2009

Illinois districts to implement RtI as part of their evaluation procedure for making SLD determinations by the 2010-2011 academic year

Participating Stakeholder Groups

Illinois Education AssociationIllinois Federation of TeachersIllinois State Advisory Council on the Education of Children with DisabilitiesIllinois Alliance of Administrators of Special EducationIllinois Association of School AdministratorsRegional Offices of EducationParent Initiative CentersIllinois Institutions of Higher EducationIllinois State Board of Education

Plan Components

Introduction/belief statements for RtIDefinition of RtI and Problem SolvingLink between RtI and specific learning disability eligibility determinationProcess for ImplementationImplementation TimelinesFunding ConsiderationsISBE Evaluation PlanSupporting Resources

District Self-Assessment

District Self-Assessment Template

Purpose is to identify district and state needsDistrict reviews seven areas of implementation:

Consensus Building and CollaborationStandards-Based Curriculum and Research-Based InstructionResearch-Based Assessment PracticesStudent Intervention/Problem Solving Team ProcessIntervention Strategy Identification Resources AllocationOngoing Professional Development for Effective RtI

Due May 23, 2008Reviewed by ISBE Team Summer 2008 to determine State Needs

Start the Process

Learn what RtI is and what it isn’t

Read the State Response to Intervention Plan posted on the ISBE website

Read the FAQ document produced by ISBE

Complete the Self-Assessment

Create the Writing Team

Access the District Improvement Plan

http://iirc.niu.edu/

Complete Plan Components for RtI

Section I-B – Local Assessment DataDataFactorsConclusions

Section I-C – Item 1 Other Data Attributes and Challenges

DataFactorsConclusions

Complete Plan Components for RtI

Section I-C – Item 3 Other Data Parent Involvement

DataFactorsConclusions

Section I-D – Key FactorsDataFactorsConclusions

Complete Plan Components for RtI

Section II-A – Action Plan RtI ObjectiveSection II-B – Student Strategies and Activities for RtISection II-C – Professional Development Strategies and Activities for RtISection II-D - Parent Involvement Strategies and Activities for RtISection II-E – Monitoring Process for RtISection III-A – Development, Review and Implementation Stakeholder Involvement

Crosswalk of Self-Assessment and RtI Plan Components

Self Assessment Section

District Improvement Plan

I. Consensus Building and Collaboration

Section III-A Stakeholder Involvement

Section I-C, Item 3Parent Involvement

Crosswalk of Self-Assessment and RtI Plan Components

Self Assessment Section

District Improvement Plan

II. Curriculum and Instruction

Section I-C, Item 1 Attributes and Challenges

Section I-DData and Analysis Key Factors

Crosswalk of Self-Assessment and RtI Plan Components

Self Assessment Section

District Improvement Plan

III. Assessment Practices

Section I-B Local Assessment

Crosswalk of Self-Assessment and RtI Plan Components

Self Assessment Section

District Improvement Plan

IV. Intervention/ Problem-Solving Team

Section I-B Local Assessment

Section I-C, Item CParent Involvement

Crosswalk of Self-Assessment and RtI Plan Components

Self Assessment Section

District Improvement Plan

V. Intervention Strategy Identification

Section I-B Local Assessment

Section I-CParent Involvement

Section II-BStudent Strategies and Activities

Section II-DParent Involvement Strategies and Activities

Section II-EMonitoring

Crosswalk of Self-Assessment and RtI Plan Components

Self Assessment Section

District Improvement Plan

VI. Resources Allocation

Section II-B Student Strategies and Activities

Section II-CProfessional Development Strategies and Activities

Section II-DParent Involvement Strategies and Activities

Section II-EMonitoring

Crosswalk of Self-Assessment and RtI Plan Components

Self Assessment Section

District Improvement Plan

VII. Professional Development

Section II-CProfessional Development Strategies and Activities

Technical Assistance

Access to IIRCWriting the RtI PlanLocal Approvals of the District RtI PlanSubmitting the RtI PlanISBE Review of RtI Plan

Internet Resources

Illinois State Board of Education website

http://www.isbe.net/RtI_plan/default.htm

Contact Information

Beth HanselmanAssistant Superintendent

Special Education

Illinois State Board of Education(217) 782-5589

bhanselm@isbe.net

Contact Information

Marica CullenDivision Administrator

Curriculum & Instruction

Illinois State Board of Education(217) 557-7323

mcullen@isbe.net

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